Ceasefire Violated In Karabakh-Azerbaijan Front Line

CEASEFIRE VIOLATED IN KARABAKH-AZERBAIJAN FRONT LINE

Panorama.am
18:13 26/02/2009

On the night of 26 February the armed forces of Azerbaijan have
violated the regime of ceasefire, reports the press service of the
NKR Defense Ministry. The rival fired the military units of NKR army
in the direction of Horadiz, Mehdili, Karakhanbeily, Yusufjanlu,
Seisulan, Karmiravan and Talish.

The NKR defense army took appropriate measures and the rival stopped
shooting. Nagorno Karabakh armed forces did not suffer losses.

Turkey Vows To Improve Relations With Armenia

TURKEY VOWS TO IMPROVE RELATIONS WITH ARMENIA

Xinhua

Feb 24 2009
China

ANKARA, Feb. 24 (Xinhua) — Turkish State Minister and Chief Negotiator
for EU Talks Egemen Bagis said Tuesday that the government wants to
improve relations with all neighbors including Armenia.

Bagis made the remarks at his meeting with directors, principals and
heads of Parent Teacher Associations of Armenian primary and high
schools in the Turkish largest city of Istanbul.

The Armenian community living in Turkey is an important bridge for
this purpose, Bagis was quoted as saying by the semi-official Anatolia
news agency.

"We wish to improve political, economic and social relations with
Armenia. Recent developments raised our hopes," said Bagis.

"I am hopeful and we see the Armenian community living in Turkey as
an important bridge for this purpose. Because you have got a lot to
add to this friendship," Bagis added.

He said hostility and hatred would go nowhere as Turkish and Armenian
people lived together on this geography for centuries.

Bagis said that Turkish and Armenian people would overcome obstacles
together, adding "we got over lots of difficulties together on this
land. We have gone through very poor and troubled days together. Now
we are experiencing maybe the most prosperous days of our history."

On Tuesday, Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman of Burak Ozugergin
called on the third countries to support the process aiming at
normalizing the relations between Turkey and Armenia.

Ozugergin said "we have been carrying out a series of talks with
Armenia in order to normalize our relations. We think that it is
not proper to send messages to each other through the press during
this process."

"We have always objected attempts to distort a certain period in
our history. We cannot accept use of such distortions as a tool of
bargaining. We will continue telling the truth," he said.

Armenia has claimed that up to 1.5 million Armenians died as a result
of "massacre" during the Turkish Ottoman Period between 1915 and 1923,
but Turkey categorically rejects the accusation.

Last November, Armenian Foreign Minister Eduard Nalbandian said that
Armenia was ready to launch diplomatic relations and open border
with Turkey without any precondition, describing Turkish President
Gul’s visit to Armenia in September as a good foundation for the
normalization of relations between the two countries.

www.chinaview.cn

Kiro Manoyan: Baku Plotting Aggression Against Karabakh

KIRO MANOYAN: BAKU PLOTTING AGGRESSION AGAINST KARABAKH

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.02.2009 18:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Azerbaijan is worried about a possible normalization
of Turkish-Armenian relations and is preparing to resolve the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict by use of force, ARF Dashnaktsutyun Bureau’s Hay
Dat and Political Affairs Office Director Kiro Manoyan told a news
conference on Tuesday.

"Baku’s increasing pressure on international structures to recognize
Armenia as an aggressor suggests that Azerbaijan is going to resort to
violence in Nagorno Karabakh. We have raised the issue in the European
parliament. There were some among the MPs who accused Armenians of
occupation, yet the Armenian delegation proved that there were no
occupied territories in Karabakh, but only liberated regions actually
belonging to Nagorno Karabakh," Manoyan said.

Azerbaijan fears that Turkey could change its position on the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict and normalize relations with Armenia, according
to him.

"Statements by Baku officials and public figures are rather disturbing,
despite Ankara’s ongoing assurances of support. If Turkey stops being
the hostage to Azerbaijan in Karabakh issue, what is inevitable,
it may provoke armed incidents," Manoyan said.

ANKARA: My Mother Tongue: Greek, Armenian and Ladino …

Bia news centre – Ä°stanbul
21-02-2008
Nayat KARAKÃ-SE-Gökçe GÃ`NDÃ`Ã?-Avi HALIGUA

The accounts of people with native languages other than Turkish,
written for bianet on occasion of the International Mother Language
Day (21 February) all resonate with the same feelings and thoughts:
the `other’ languages have been silenced, hidden, and thus not
developed.

Lack of formal teaching and/or lack of societal recognition of the
languages has meant that there is a danger or reality of new
generations not learning them anymore.

Greek, Kurdish, Bosnian, Ladino, Arabic, Armenian, ¦they have all
experience assimilation policies in Turkey.

Greek population dwindling
We spoke to Mihail Vasiliadis, the editor of the Apoyevmatini
newspaper. He said that with the forced migration of Greeks from
Turkey (`Rum’) in 1964, the population dropped from 100,000 to under
3,000.

`The reduction in the population has also made it difficult to speak
the language. There are around 2,000 Greek-speaking Rum among the 70
million Turks. Families have even started to use Turkish.’

The editor has also pointed to the pervasive influence of TV on the
young generation: `The new generation grew up with Turkish. Of course
everyone must know the state’s official language. But they must also
be able to use their own languages at the same level.’

Because the Greek spoken in Turkey is identical with the Greek of
Greece, there is no danger of the language dying out; however, there
is a question of linguistic competence.

`There used to be a Greek school in every neighbourhood of
Istanbul. Now there are only three high schools and five primary
schools.’

The Apoyevmatini has got a circulation of 600, but Vasiliadis still
insists on publishing only in Greek in order to keep the language
alive.

"Not as well as the language deserves"
Nayat Karaköse, an `Armenian living in Turkey’, wrote about her
experiences with her experience of `not being able to speak, read or
write Armenian as well as it deserves.’ Although she attended an
Armenian school until third grade, she then asked her parents to take
her out because she was unhappy.

She blames her unhappiness on the pressure children feel when learning
two languages at once, with different alphabets. Her parents, friends
and relatives all warned her not to forget her Armenian, but she says:

`Every day as I was growing up, I neglected Armenian. Years passed and
I learned English, French, a lot of Italian, but I had thrown my own
mother tongue to the side and forgotten more and more of it.’

She nevertheless feels grateful for being able to speak the language,
while today many Armenian children do not know their mother tongue
anymore.

"Loss of language is not the most vital issue"
Avi Haligua speaks of the loss of Ladino, the Spanish dialect spoken
by the descendants of the Sephardic Jews fleeing the Spanish
Inquisition and coming to Constantinople, today Istanbul, in the 15th
Century. He himself was brought up speaking Turkish and says, `For the
third generation, most people will not speak [Ladino].’

`All my memories connected to Ladino belong to my childhood. I only
know the terms of endearment well in that language.’

Haligua writes that in the nation-building process, the Republic
wanted one language only, one result of which was the `Citizen speak
Turkish’ campaign of 1928.

Erdogan’s double standards
He says, cynically, that the assimilation which Turkish Prime Minister
Erdogan denounced as a `crime against humanity’ in Germany recently,
was applied strictly in Turkey.

However, for Haligua the main problem is not the loss of the language;
as long as the different people in Turkey, be they a headscarved
student, a Kurd forced to migrate, a Senegalese `illegal migrant’, a
writer sentenced under Article 301, or a worker forced to work under
slave conditions, are not treated as people, then there will be no
peaceful coexistence.

Armenia’s ex-Ambassador to Germany appointed RA Deputy FM

PanARMENIAN.Net

Armenia’s ex-Ambassador to Germany appointed RA Deputy Foreign Minister
21.02.2009 12:28 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In accordance with the decree by Armenian President
Serzh Sargsyan, Ambassador of Armenia to Germany Karine Ghazinyan was
dismissed from the post, RA government press office reported.

According to another decree, Karine Ghazinyan was appointed as Deputy
Minister of Foreign Affairs.

She replaced Gegham Gharibjanian, who currently occupies the position
of the RA NA executive personnel.

"Everything Should Be Done To Make Nagorno Karabakh Negotiating Part

"EVERYTHING SHOULD BE DONE TO MAKE NAGORNO KARABAKH NEGOTIATING PARTY"

Panorama.am
13:48 20/02/2009

The Chairman of the National Assembly of Armenia Hovik Abrahanyan
is currently paying two-day working visit to Nagorno Karabakh. The
delegation chaired by the Chairman consists of the Vice Prime Minister,
the Minister of Territorial Administration Armen Gevorgyan, the Chief
of Staff of the NA Gegham Gharibjanyan, deputies Avet Adonts, Armen
Roustamyan, Areg Ghukasyan, Hamlet Harutyunyan, etc.

The Chairmen of the National Assemblies of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh
held a session of inter-parliamentary council.

Hovik Abrahamyan said that Armenia signifies the role of OSCE Minsk
Group co-chairs in holding the negotiations over Karabakh conflict.

Deputy Armen Roustamyan said that parliamentary diplomacy should be
developed and everything should be done to make NKR negotiating party.

The Chairman of the NA of Armenia had a separate meeting with the
President of NKR Bako Sahakyan, after which the meeting continued in
an expanded format, reports the press service of the NA.

BAKU: President Aliyev: Potential For Peace Talks Remains Alive

PRESIDENT ALIYEV: POTENTIAL FOR PEACE TALKS REMAINS ALIVE

AzerNews Weekly
Feb 18 2009
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has said the possibilities for
negotiating a settlement to the long-standing conflict with Armenia
have not yet been exhausted.

Aliyev told the Russian state news agency ITAR-TASS that resolving
the Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict was possible and Azerbaijan is
focused on seeking a solution to the problem.

He emphasized that Baku was trying to intensify ongoing peace talks
and clarify future prospects for a Garabagh settlement, considering
that a new leader has recently come to power in Armenia.

"There are certain hopes for Armenia`s more constructive and realistic
approach to the issue. These expectations have emerged not only among
us, but also among the mediators dealing with settling the conflict,"
Aliyev said.

He noted that peace talks are currently underway based upon the
principles outlined in the Moscow declaration signed by Baku and
Yerevan late last year.

The Azerbaijani and Armenian leaders signed the document on November
2, 2008 as part of talks that were hosted by Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev. Being the first document signed by the two heads of state
in the past 16 years, it called for settling the Garabagh conflict
based upon principles of international law and respective decisions
and resolutions passed so far.

"Naturally, this implies the four UN Security Council resolutions, the
UN General Assembly resolution and the OSCE Lisbon summit decision. All
these documents envision settling the conflict within Azerbaijan`s
territorial integrity," the president said.

Aliyev said, further, that the Moscow declaration also foresees
supplementing all stages of a treaty with international
guarantees. Azerbaijan has always stated that the dispute could
be resolved in stages. In other words, seven Azerbaijani districts
around Upper Garabagh, currently under Armenian occupation, must be
freed during the first stage. Azerbaijani refugees displaced during
the armed conflict in the early 1990s are to return home. Also,
the population that is living and will live in the region should be
provided with international security guarantees. During the next stage,
the legal status of Upper Garabagh is to be determined. The president
reiterated that determining the residents` status must comply with
his country`s territorial integrity.

Upper Garabagh has been occupied by Armenia since a 1994 ceasefire
ended hostilities that killed an estimated 30,000 people and ousted
about one million Azeris from their homes. Years of peace talks have
brought few tangible results.

However, Armenia has reiterated its claims to Upper Garabagh, with
President Serzh Sarkisian declaring that the region does not belong
to Azerbaijan.

"Garabagh will not be Azerbaijani territory. There is absolutely
no legal ground for this," he announced during a meeting with
representatives of the pro-government Prosperous Armenia party.

Sarkisian also said that the most important issue was that "the
people of Garabagh" do not want their territory to be transferred to
Azerbaijan`s control.

"Garabagh is our land, and it`s invaluable. Therefore, bargaining on
this issue is out of place," the Armenian leader said.

Baku, in turn, stated that Sarkisian`s statement is baseless.

"Azerbaijan has not put its land up for sale. The people of Upper
Garabagh are non-existent, and a non-existent nation cannot have any
desires," Khazar Ibrahim, the spokesman for the Azerbaijan Foreign
Ministry said, emphasizing that the population of the region consists
of both Azerbaijani and Armenian communities.

He said Sarkisian`s statement indicated that Yerevan was sticking to
its policy of aggression.

Ibrahim added that the OSCE Minsk Group – a team of diplomats brokering
a settlement to the Garabagh conflict – must respond to this statement.

Armenian Parliamentary Speaker: Our Karabakh Compatriots Must Approv

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENTARY SPEAKER: OUR KARABAKH COMPATRIOTS MUST APPROVE ANY AGREEMENT ON SETTLEMENT OF KARABAKH CONFLICT

ArmInfo
2009-02-20 10:47:00

ArmInfo. "Peaceful settlement of Karabakh conflict is constantly
in the focus of attention of Armenian Parliament. Numerous hearings
and discussions have been held on this topic", Armenian Parliamentary
Speaker Hovik Abrahamyan declared in Stepanakert, ArmInfo correspondent
to Stepanakert reported. The Armenian speaker heads a delegation
to the Nagorny Karabakh Republic for participation in the regular
meeting of Armenian-NKR Inter-parliamentary Commission for Cooperation.

‘We have one principle: our Karabakh compatriots must approve any
agreement on settlement of Karabakh conflict’, he said. As regards
the process of settling the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict, Hovik
Abrahamyan said: ‘Republic of Armenia appreciates the meditation of
OSCE Minsk Group in the processes on development of Karabakh conflict
as effective format of negotiations’. ‘Any attempt to settle the
conflict by force may have unpredictable aftermaths both for the
parties and the region in the whole. Republic of Armenia supports
the principle of peaceful settlement of the conflict and highlights
the importance of confidence building for further constructive
negotiations. The parties should refrain from any steps that may
aggravate tension and create obstacles to the peace process’,
Hovik Abrahamyan said. He is sure that Nagorny Karabakh must have
uninterrupted land communication with Armenia and the security of
the Karabakh people must be guaranteed at the international level.

The speaker highlighted the close cooperation of Armenian and Karabakh
parliaments and came out for regular meetings and discussions.

To recall, H. Abrahamyan’s delegation comprising Vice Premier of
Armenia, Minister of Territorial Administration Armen Gevorgyan,
representatives of the parliament and the government arrived in
NKR on February 19. The delegation participated in the regular
meeting of the Armenian-NKR Inter- parliamentary Commission for
Cooperation. Hovik Abrahamyan is expected to meet with NKR President
Bako Sahakyan tete-a-tete. Afterwards, an enlarged meeting will be
held. The delegates will visit Stepanakert Memorial Complex, Church
Surb Ghazanchetsots in the town of Shushi as well as will meet with
Leader of Artsakh Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church Archbishop
Pargev Martirosyan. On February 20 the delegation will arrived back
to Yerevan.

Crescenta Valley High Junior Steps Up to Serve Community Through ANC

Armenian National Committee – Western Region
104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
Glendale, California 91206
Phone: 818.500.1918
Fax: 818.246.7353
[email protected]

PRESS RELEASE

February 20, 2009
Contact: Sara Simounian

Crescenta Valley High School Junior Steps Up to Serve
Community Through ANC-WR

LOS ANGELES, CA – Sara Simounian recently joined the Armenian National
Committee – Western Region’s Internship-Externship Program (ANC-WR
IEP) as one of its newest interns this spring. As part of the
program, Simounian will be specializing in Public and Media Relations.
Only a few weeks into the program, Simounian has jumped into action
assisting the ANC staff with several projects ranging from press
releases to event promotion.

"Through the program I am learning more about current issues dealing
with Armenia and Armenian communities all over the world," noted
Simounian. "Though I am dealing with present community concerns,
doing so has made me feel a greater appreciation for my heritage," she
added.

Simounian is a third year student attending Crescenta Valley High
School in Glendale. She intends to continue her academic studies at
Glendale Community College before heading off to university. In
addition to her projects, Simounian has also had the opportunity to
learn more about the ANC as well as valuable work environment skills
through the internship program’s lecture, workshop, and seminar
series.

Simounian learned about the internship program through her brother, an
ANC-WR IEP alumnus. She had regularly volunteered for the ANC-WR in
the past year and as soon as Simounian heard about the 2009 Spring
Session of the internship program she quickly submitted her
application.

"One of the best things about this program is that I get to work with
friends who feel just as strongly as me about making a positive
difference in my community," said Simounian.

The Armenian National Committee ? Western Region is the largest and
most influential Armenian American Grassroots advocacy organization in
the Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of
offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States
and affiliated organizations around the country, the ANC-WR advances
the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of
issues.

www.anca.org